Periagoge
Concept
1 min read

Layered Identity—Public and Private Self

The recognition that you can hold multiple, sometimes contradictory versions of identity simultaneously—the self presented to the world and the self known in solitude.

Juana
Why It Matters

Sor Juana inhabited multiple identities: the obedient nun, the celebrated poet, the intellectual rebel, the strategist navigating colonial power. She understood that these identities were not false but necessary dimensions of surviving and thriving in a complex world. For adopted people, layered identity is particularly relevant because adoption itself creates a fundamental split: the self defined by adoption status and the self beyond or independent of that category. You might present one identity to adoptive family, another to biological connections, and yet another to yourself. Rather than seeing this as fragmentation, the Sor Juana tradition validates layered identity as sophisticated and intelligent survival. The public self and private self can coexist without one negating the other. Understanding that you contain multitudes—that your identity is capacious enough to hold apparent contradictions—allows you to move through different contexts with integrity rather than feeling divided or inauthentic.

Helpful guides
Juana
Identity & Justice
Peri
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